Eh, I'm not willing to assign this to the boogeyman of corporate greed just yet.
I know bwar doesn't think it's mutating quickly enough to warrant such measures, but I think the Brazilian variant, UK variant, and South African variant would all disagree with this hypothesis. These are three major, significantly more infectious mutations, that all occurred with 6-9 months of the original strains entering those regions.
As I've said for the past 11 months or so, I'm not confident we're going to be able to contain this virus via human intervention mechanisms.
But ultimately, it will no longer be seen as a novel virus by our systems, and we'll build up our own natural immunity to it. It will become one of many coronaviruses that affect and harm us on an annual basis, but it will no longer be the killer that it currently is.